Apple

The Race to a $4 Trillion Market Cap: Apple, Nvidia, or Microsoft – Yahoo Finance


Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) became the first company to top a $1 trillion market cap in 2018. Today, it remains the largest company in the world by market cap, sitting around $3.6 trillion. But it has some company near the top of the mountain.

Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has seen its value soar higher amid the artificial intelligence (AI) boom. Its GPUs are essential infrastructure for companies training and running large language models. Its market cap currently sits just above $3.5 trillion as of this writing.

Meanwhile, Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) managed to continue growing thanks to an early bet on generative AI leader OpenAI, which put its cloud computing business in an enviable position as developers and enterprises looked to take advantage of new AI capabilities. Its market cap sits at $3.1 trillion.

Because market prognosticators have a propensity for always searching out the next marker to hit, investors are likely seeing discussions about which of these companies could reach $4 trillion first (and stay there). Let’s take a closer look at all three and see if an answer presents itself.

Apple took the wraps off its AI features, dubbed Apple Intelligence, at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June. Unfortunately, all of those AI features weren’t ready to go when the iPhone 16 launched in September. iPhone owners will get their first taste of Apple Intelligence at the end of October with more features coming out over the next six months or so.

Apple Intelligence includes some compelling promises that could make the iPhone a much more powerful device for productivity, communication, creativity, and general life management. But there’s a big catch. It’s only available on newer iPhones: the iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro Max, and the complete iPhone 16 lineup. As such, hundreds of millions of iPhone owners will have to upgrade their devices to get access to Apple Intelligence.

The interest in AI could lead to a so-called “super cycle,” driving record sales of the iPhone. Wedbush analyst Dan Ives thinks Apple could sell 240 million iPhones in fiscal 2025. Apple’s already seeing relative strength in China compared to last year, and the early data from the U.S. launch were mostly positive. But it’s likely to play out over the course of the year, if not longer.

A stronger-than-expected upgrade cycle and progress toward direct monetization of AI features could propel Apple’s stock to the $4 trillion level. At its current price of 31.5 times analysts’ consensus estimate for 2025 earnings, the stock trades at a premium to the overall market. Apple certainly deserves a premium given its massive free cash flow generation and share repurchase program. But Apple likely needs to outperform single-digit percentage revenue growth expectations for next year to justify a $4 trillion valuation.



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